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The Swiss 4-pillars policy : intégration or encystment ?

The Swiss 4-pillars policy : intégration or encystment ?. Daniele Zullino. WHO collaborating center. Structuralism. Sociology , anthropology and linguistics Elements of human culture must be understood in terms of their relationship to a larger, overarching system or structure

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The Swiss 4-pillars policy : intégration or encystment ?

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  1. The Swiss 4-pillars policy : intégration or encystment ? Daniele Zullino WHO collaborating center

  2. Structuralism • Sociology, anthropology and linguistics • Elements of human culture must be understood in terms of their relationship to a larger, overarching system or structure • ➛ uncover structures that underlie all the things that humans do, think, perceive, and feel

  3. Juldarigi줄다리기

  4. Juldarigi줄다리기 • Tug-of-war ceremonies • One rope's smaller loop being placed through the other's larger loop • Reminiscent of sexual intercourse • gives rise to the sport's association with fecundity • Eastern team : sutjul (숫줄 "male rope") • Western team :amjul(암줄 "female rope ») • Because of the ropes' great size, they cannot be grasped directly • players attached smaller side-ropes to the main rope

  5. hospitalo-centered outpatient cost-effectiveness efficacy ψ security civil rights symptoms QoL

  6. Structural anthropology • meaning is produced (and reproduced) within a culture through various practices that serve as systems of signification • e.g. food-preparation and serving rituals, religious rites, games, literary and non-literary texts etc.

  7. Claude Levy-Strauss

  8. Anthropoemic societies • Anthropoemia = to vomit humans • « … to expel these dreaded beings from the body public by isolating them for a time, or forever, denying them all contact with humanity, in establishments devised for that express purpose. »

  9. Anthropophagic societies • Those confronted to certain individuals possessing dreaded forces will be absorbed with the aim … • of neutralizing them • of profiting from them

  10. 3 types of society • Anthropoemic • encapsulating anthropophagic • to neutralize • assimilating anthropophagic • to profit

  11. Anthropoemic psychiatry • Within the framework of an anthropoemic society • Rejects those who represent a dreaded force out of the social body • those who « out of the usual physiological logic » could put at risk society’s homeostasis • Metaphorically, the toxic element will be vomited • put at distance physically • cut all contacts with normal world • Once: leprous were chased from the city in order not to rotten the flesh of healthy citizens • Nowadays: the mad has be expelled in order not to infect with his rotten logic

  12. From anthropoemia to anthropophagia • Antipsychiatric and community psychiatry movements ➛ systematic application of anthropoeic model inacceptable • ➛ Anthropophagic approach

  13. Encapsulating Anthropophagia • Incorporates the deviant • Confines, restrains, restricts, hogties, conceals, hides in a place inside the society • disjointed from society • in order to neutralize the dreaded forces which call into question normality

  14. Foreign Body Granuloma

  15. Encapsulating Anthropophagic Psychiatry • Perturbing agent can’t be expulsed or it is to costly to be expulsed • Homeostasis will be saved by encapsulation of the foreign body • Cost-efficacious • System has to function around the encapsulated foreign body

  16. Encapsulating Anthropophagic Psychiatry • ➛ therefore necessary to implement the social control logic of the mental asylum (external of the social body) in structures located within the city • Organization of a dispositive with procedures to take off the dreadful forces of normal societal fabric • Organization of an "encapsulating bureaucracy”, as thick and rigid as possible • A social granuloma

  17. The deviant • For encapsulating system: problem is the "deviant" behavior that puts at risk the society • This behavior can be rationalized, perhaps even explained (by the encapsulating agent) • ➛ disease (deviance) is a possession of the physician, of the medicine …. of others • The patient’s experience is at best of secondary interest

  18. What's a deviant ? • Michel Foucault • … focuses on the economically unproductive man as an enemy of (capitalist) disciplinary society and describes disciplinary institutions (school, factory, hospital ...) as machineries to discipline the non-productive man

  19. What's a deviant • Jürgen Ruesch, 1972 • Deviant = person who does not produce for society • violates the conventions of the time • guilty of infringements of space and properties • improperly uses its own energy (badly distributing them) • mismanaging its finances • ineffective in its productive actions • miscommunication, shifted, "illogical » • ➛ almost perfect definition of the  »fool" ... but also the "offender" or "slacker » 

  20. How to treat the deviant • The machine to treat these deviant characters should thus correct this deviation to (re-)make economically productive people • if the recovery in economic productivity is not possible: prevent them from interfering with economic productivity

  21. The deviant • No deviant behavior or thought without existing custom • But also, no development, no progress, no evolution without deviation • A deviant is always also somebody who emanates • The deviant is even the origin of any developments • The ability to take advantage of deviance is perhaps the only way to evolve • Deviance is thus in this sense a development opportunity • However: deviance becomes a danger if it exceeds the system's adaptability • Danger of exhaustion, disintegration among others

  22. Alternative definition of the deviant • Person who does not participate in the common life • Political participation (voting, electing, being elected, advocating, forming an opinion etc.) • Cultural participation (inspiring oneself, inspiring others, seeking meaning, transmitting meaning) • Civil participation (help, mutual aid, togetherness, welcoming, to welcome etc.).

  23. Alternative definition of the deviant • ”Encapsulating" society : does not allow participation • “Assimilating“ society: allows (or even requires) a participation in social, civil, political life • ➛ to take advantage of the tension produced by the deviant • What to do with these forces ? How to use them ? • How can what motivated at first exclusion now become (at least in part) an asset ? • What has craziness to offer ?

  24. Assimilatinganthropophagicpsychiatry • A psychiatry within the social body • geographically, but also regarding the deviant and the normed • Not a psychiatry which rids the normed from the deviant • But: attributes, and even confirms a place and a role to the deviant within the social body • Anthropophagia not to isolate but to incorporate • in order to to take advantage of these formidable forces

  25. Tasks of an anthropophagic psychiatry • To benefit from the deviant • To limit the disruption represented by the madness in order to be assimilable by society • In order to “take advantage of madness” • madness has to be “swallowed” by society (it has to be present) • it has to interfere with the normal, has to destabilize it • it is moderated (e.g. by psychiatry)

  26. Tasks of an anthropophagic psychiatry • Organize interferences between society and the deviant • Similarly to interaction between artists and society • Artist produces deviances that are strong enough to trigger the revival through assimilation in the society without overstraining • If he succeeds his artistic enterprise, he is original • If it exceeds the public’s assimilation capacity, if the starting distance between convenient logic and the logic of his work is too important, he will be absurd, inane, stupid ... not to consider, to deny, to exclude

  27. Transition to an assimilating system • The experience (how a one thing is, the phenomenon) of the patient becomes the primary interest • Patient’s experience belongs to him • Consequences: • Patient becomes the decision maker concerning his future • Health care giver his assistant at best • Patient may present the "new", new experiences, new understandings

  28. Transition to an assimilating system vision change isolating a deviance keeping deviance and normality separated advocating interactions between otherness and normality

  29. Working methods of the assimilating anthropophagic psychiatry • Restore patients dignity as citizen • Give them back their "existential possibilities" • She owes them the possibility of imagining roles (= existences) within the social fabric • And not just a role as a demarcation line denoting the separation of suitable and inadmissible

  30. Working methods of the assimilating anthropophagic psychiatry • Has to develop possible selves for patients (but also for the institution itself) around the principle of civic participation rather than around the social integration precept • Should rather be a creative, generative, designing, innovative institution than a conservative institution which is guardian of conventions, librarian of deviance • For this it must obviously question its role as guardian of the order

  31. Assimilating anthropophagic psychiatry should be artistic • Artist = persona that builds on agreements in order to divert them, to unwrap them, deploy them … go beyond • Assimilating anthropophagic psychiatry should be based on conventions (accepting them as given) … to go beyond

  32. Transition to an assimilating system asylium model assimilating model Patient observed in an artificial spatial-temporal context (in vitro) amputated from his original context accompanied within hissituation (in vivo) discontinuity between life and disease continuity of a life path

  33. Encapsulating Anthrophagia Assimilating Anthropoemia Anthropoemia

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